Gillian Armstrong
‘I’m no longer the person who feels like they shouldn’t be at the party’: Kirsten Dunst
She’s been a movie star since she was 11, but it’s only now, 30 years later, that the actor feels that she’s arrived.
- by Michael Idato
Latest
Pink parties and ladies nights: Cinemas predict Barbie success
Themed movie nights, nightclub events and merchandise are bringing the “summer of Barbie” to the antipodean winter.
- by Mary Ward
The forgotten film collectives that transformed Australian cinema
Iconic Australian directors like Gillian Armstrong and Phil Noyce were part of an underground movement that went on to define the country’s film landscape.
- by Garry Maddox
The lost years: where have Australia’s film classics gone?
These days it’s far easier to stream a Hollywood film from the 1990s than an Australian one. Jurassic Park is available, but not Strictly Ballroom.
- by Craig Mathieson
Calling the shots: the Aussie women conquering Hollywood
Australian female directors are suddenly everywhere in Hollywood. Who are they, where did they come from, and how did they get there?
- by Karl Quinn
Australian screen icons reveal what they're watching during lockdown
Acclaimed director Gillian Armstrong and award-winning actor Marta Dusseldorp also discuss whether lockdown will sound the death knell for cinema.
- by Josh Dye
'They know what they want': The power of Little Women's Jo and Amy
For Saoirse Ronan and Florence Pugh, the combative sisters they play in the latest adaptation of Louisa May Alcott's classic novel have more in common than you think.
- by Amy Kaufman
Original URL: https://www.smh.com.au/topic/gillian-armstrong-33o